NEW YORK- Oil prices closed out their biggest week of losses in more than nine months with another down day on Friday, as investors sold futures in anticipation of weakened fuel demand worldwide due to a surge in COVID-19 cases.
The crude market has now posted seven consecutive days of losses. Numerous nations worldwide are responding to the rising infection rate due to the coronavirus Delta variant by adding travel restrictions to cut off the spread.
China has imposed stricter disinfection methods at ports, causing congestion, nations including Australia have ratcheted up travel restrictions, and global jet fuel demand is softening after improving for most of the summer.
“It’s hard or prices to find support with this kind of uncertainty,” said John Kilduff, partner at Again Capital LLP in New York.
Brent crude fell 8 percent on the week, settling down $1.27, or 1.9 percent, to $65.18 a barrel, its lowest since April and down about 8 percent for the week. US West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude for September settled down $1.37, or 2.2 percent, to $62.32 a barrel on Friday, to lose more than 9 percent for the week.
China, the world’s largest crude importer, has imposed new restrictions with its “zero tolerance” coronavirus policy, which is affecting shipping and global supply chains. The United States and China have also imposed flight-capacity restrictions.
“They are acting severely for minimal outbreaks, which is a direct threat for the demand profile there,” Kilduff said.
Several US companies have delayed return-to-office plans. Apple Inc, the largest US company by market value, is delaying the return of its workers until early 2022, Bloomberg reported.
The US dollar hit a nine-month high on signs the US Federal Reserve is considering reducing stimulus this year. Oil prices move inversely to the US currency, making oil more expensive for foreign purchasers when the dollar rallies.
While the Delta variant drags on fuel demand, supply is steadily increasing. US production rose to 11.4 million barrels per day in the most recent week, and drilling firms added rigs for the third week in a row, services company Baker Hughes said.
The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and its allies are slowly boosting supply that had been shut early in the pandemic.
Futures contracts suggest that the market expects plenty of supply in coming months. The premium for the front month Brent contract over the third-month contract has nearly halved between late July and now, indicating that near-term supply will not be as tight as the market had expected.
“The oil market has quickly noticed that the Delta variant is a growing problem and a potential hurdle to a mobility/fuel demand recovery,” Francisco Blanch, Bank of America commodity & derivative strategist, said in a note.
Analysts said oil markets only exhibit the current combination of falling spot prices and a calendar spread in backwardation relatively infrequently, which suggests the contradiction between them will resolve itself rapidly.
Falling spot prices imply the production-consumption balance is expected to become less tight — but backwardation implies the opposite, with a further drawdown in inventories from already low levels.
The contradictory combination of falling prices and backwardation normally occurs when prices have passed a cyclical peak, whether a major multi-year cycle or a more temporary short-term one.